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This problem didn’t really come to the top until after D-Day when the Sherman was supporting infantry in the bocage country, and close cooperation was needed. This helped, but in combat, they still had real communication problems, no matter how long they had worked together in training. So Shermans would be sent to support Infantry, usually, a separate tank battalion would send a platoon over to regiment of infantry, often the battalion would be assigned to the same infantry division for a long period of time so they could get used to working with the same people. They also had the problem that tank radios and infantry radios did not share frequencies or even band! This M4 Composite hull supporting the 96th ID on Okinawa has an infantry phone, and there is Dough on it. It’s hard to believe in today’s world talking to people inside a vehicle right next to you would be a problem, like send a text right bro? Well not back in the forties, they did have two-way radios, but the technology used vacuum tubes, because transistors had not been invented, and they were not very reliable and had a limited number of radio frequencies they could talk on. When I first read about the communication problems between tankers, and the ‘doughs’ they were fighting with I was surprised.

M4 tanks and US Armor, in general, couldn’t talk to the infantry they were tasked to support. Tank Infantry Communication: That’s Right, Tanks, and Infantry radios Did Not Talk to Each Other! The only decent image I could find of the phone on a tank( I found more)
#M4 sherman commander radio manuals
#M4 sherman commander radio series
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M4 Series Driver and Co Driver’s position page.
#M4 sherman commander radio plus
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The Ford GAA Data Page: More info and technical Drawings and Manual photos than anyplace on the Internet.The Continental R975 Page: The Main Engine in the Beginning.The Links Page: An easier to find place for Links.Reading the Pen Charts from OOTCOR-Terminal Ballistic Data V.III.M4 Sherman Tank Small Arms Page: The Machineguns and their mounts, used on the M4 series.M4 Series Fire Control: How the Sherman aimed it’s gun.17 Pounder Mk IV and VII Gun Information page.Sherman, Lee, and variants, Gun Data Page.The Sherman Tank Site: The Place For All Things Sherman Tank.
